Bird nests are as varied as the species that nest here

From tightly woven masterpieces to casually plopped arrays, different species follow their own blueprints.

For the Minnesota Star Tribune
June 27, 2024 at 12:35PM
A mourning dove and two of its chicks nestle in a planter.
Two mourning dove babies and one of their parents more than fill their nest in a plant pot on an apartment deck in St. Louis Park. The young birds were getting close to fledging — leaving the nest. (Marilyn McGonagle)

A Baltimore oriole nest made of mostly horse hair, and only horse hair, is the best bird nest I have ever seen. It was found in a tree in the yard of a friend.

Alex, who showed me the nest, lives on an old farmstead, neighbor to a stable that housed a pair of horses. The hair nest was built about 100 feet from the barn, so the source of material was not in question.

I was there in a grove of trees to watch a female oriole build that spring’s nest, strands of grass her material of choice.

Orioles are weavers of nests, usually working with natural fibers, vegetation of some kind, like strands of grass.

In an article in Audubon magazine a few years ago, Nancy Flood, a Thompson Rivers University biologist, describes the process well:

“You see the female poking one end of the string through, and then pulling her head back to weave it out, just like when you crochet or knit a bag.

“They can spend half an hour doing that, then go away to get another long piece of grass and do more,” Flood said.

An elongated cup-shape oriole nest made of mostly horsehair hangs from a branch with some leaves.
A Baltimore oriole nest made out of mostly horse hair. (Jim Williams)

The horse-hair nest is woven tightly enough to hold water, at least for a few moments. It’s a work of art. It must have taken days to build.

You often can see oriole nests hanging like trimming from tree branches. Cottonwoods are good trees to check. The nests are easier to see in the fall, of course, when they decorate naked branches.

My experiences this year have been with dove and pigeon nests. The doves were minimalists: thin curls of grass barely forming a nest in a flowerpot on an apartment balcony.

The pigeon nest also was built on a balcony, this one overlooking Loring Park. You can see in the photo taken by my friend Peter, balcony landlord, that a small plastic pot is basically all there is to the nest, an economic effort to say the least.

Pigeon chicks in a nest made in a plastic pot.
The birds we commonly know as pigeons sometimes choose convenience over other possible qualities when nesting. These two pigeon babies were raised in a plastic plant pot on a deck overlooking Loring Park. (Peter Neubeck)

Birds of the pigeon family are known for flimsy platform nests. They sometimes locate nests on the window ledges of buildings. Pigeons are properly known as rock doves, cliffs being their natural nesting site.

Reader Ray Bryan of St. Paul has had house finches nesting in his garage for the past couple of years. The finch nest, with four eggs, is the antithesis of the dove nest, a tightly woven, perfectly round nest of grass. It is a work of finely tuned instinct.

Bird nests are almost as individual as birds themselves. Most of us can readily distinguish a cardinal from a chickadee, and distinguishing the nests of those two species certainly is possible once you know what to look for. Many bird nests offer that opportunity.

Minnesota has 231 confirmed nesting species of birds, according to the recently published summary of our first breeding bird survey. Some of these are year-round residents. Others are migrants here because our habitats provide them with superior nesting opportunities.

If bird nests interest you, a recommended book is “A Guide to the Nests, Eggs, and Nestlings of North American Birds,” second edition, Paul J. Baicich and Colin J.O. Harrison, Academic Press, 1997.

Lifelong birder Jim Williams can be reached at woodduck38@gmail.com.

Two young mourning doves on a balcony railing flanked on either side of their parents.
Bird families don’t often pose for photos in the moments following the fledging event — young birds leaving the nest. This mourning dove family posed for a photo by their landlord, Marilyn McGonagle. The birds nested on the deck of her apartment. The young birds flank their parents. (Marilyn McGonagle. )

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Jim Williams

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